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Dateline NBC - Talking Dateline: The Terrible Night on King Road
Episode Date: May 14, 2025Keith Morrison and Blayne Alexander sit down to talk about Keith’s latest episode "The Terrible Night on King Road” which reveals new details about the 2022 murders of four University of Idaho stu...dents and features never-before-reported evidence, including video, photographic and digital materials. Keith tells Blayne what Dateline has learned about Bryan Kohberger, the criminology student accused of the murder and his apparent fascination with serial killer Ted Bundy. He also shares audio from interviews with the murdered students' families and friends who reflect on the young lives lost. Plus, Keith answers viewer and listener questions. If you have a question for Talking Dateline, send us an audio message on social @datelinenbc or leave us a voicemail at 212-413-5252. Listen to the full episode of “The Terrible Night on King Road” on Apple: https://apple.co/4iUS7Hv Listen to the full episode on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/episode/68yl7vps4zDmzOoZOj8hZv
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everyone. It's Blaine Alexander and we are Talking Dateline. I'm joined by the one
and only Keith Morrison to talk about his latest episode, The Terrible Night on King
Road. Hi, Keith.
Hi, how are you? And it's nice to see you and hear you too, for those who weren't seeing
you.
Good to see you and hear you too, my friend. So before we jump in, if you haven't seen
it, it's the episode right below this one on your Dateline podcast feed. So make sure to go there, listen to it or stream
it on Peacock and then come right back here. Now, just to recap, in the early morning hours
of November 13th, 2022, four University of Idaho students were found stabbed to death
in their home. With the trial of Brian Koberger, the man accused of killing the students now
just 12 weeks away, Keith and his team revealed the results of Brian Coburger, the man accused of killing the students now just 12
weeks away, Keith and his team revealed the results of their groundbreaking two-year investigation
into this case. The episode sheds incredible new light on the murders and just what happened that
night on King Road. For this Talking Dateline, we want to tell you, of course, a little bit more
about who those four students were that were murdered that night through the eyes of those who loved them best. Okay, let's talk Dateline, Keith.
Right.
You know, before we jump into this discussion, I think it's important to note that this episode
is so different from the episodes and stories that we typically do on Dateline, right? Because
by the time we get our hands on a story, usually the case
is adjudicated. Somebody has either been found guilty or acquitted, and that is of course
not the case here.
Usually, yes, that's correct. Occasionally, we will do a series of stories as we have
done in this case. Soon after a crime occurs and then kind of follow it through the process
as it leads toward trial. This case, every detail is being fought out in court.
It's one of which we have had to be very, very careful in the way we do it.
And we understood from the start and continue to understand, and I think everybody needs
to understand that in our court system, the man accused in this case is innocent until
and unless he's proven guilty.
And so everything we report is based on that premise.
We have gathered material from extremely reliable sources,
who we trust.
These sources are backed up by other sources.
It's all pretty carefully vetted.
We've done our very best to make sure
that we're totally accurate.
So it's the pure information in this story
that we are very happy to have been able to report.
Sure. There are a lot of different sensitivities when it comes to reporting a story like this,
when it comes to the story that you and your team aired, and even when it comes to our
conversation here.
Oh, yes. There really are. It's just something you want to be careful about, that's all, that I want to be careful
about.
So my answers may seem a little cagey-er than usual.
It's not that they're cagey, it's just that I don't want to say anything wrong.
There is nothing cagey about you, Keith Morrison.
All good.
Well, sometimes a little bit cagey.
Maybe.
You know, let's dive in because I think that another thing that was different about this
story is sometimes when we present stories to our audience, this may be the first time
that many people have heard about this case. Obviously not the case here. If anybody has
followed and consumed any bit of news over the past two plus years, you know, at least
in some part, have some degree of familiarity with this case out of Idaho.
So when you do a story like this, when people really are hanging on every small detail of
this, certainly when you're able to advance a story the way that you have, that's a remarkable
thing.
Well, yes.
And one of the facts of this case is that there's a gag order.
Now, some people wonder whether a gag order prevents us from doing our reporting, and it does not. We can continue to ferret out what information we
can.
I mean, the big question in all of this, and from the beginning, has been who is Brian
Koberger? And in this episode, you described him as a man who lived in the shadows.
To some degree, perhaps. He was known to like to spend a lot of time alone.
He was known to like to be out at night by himself.
He seemed attracted to the darkness.
And that was just an aspect of his personality,
which may or may not have meant anything,
but lives in the shadows might be a little strong,
but he was somebody
who was socially awkward, at least as people described it to us, at the same time. His
professors said that he was one of the brightest people, or some of them, his past professors
especially, one of the brightest students they ever had. And because he was studying criminology
and getting a PhD in criminology,
it made sense that he was studying some subjects
which might be considered very dark,
very difficult, very scary to some people.
And that that might have a perfectly reasonable explanation,
but he was an odd fellow.
You know, in talking about his chosen field of study, criminology, I have to say that
when I was watching your story and when you reported about the Google searches that were
found on his phone, this, you know, some of the questions, can psychopaths behave prosocially
and sociopathic traits in college student?
I have to say that when I saw that, I thought, okay,
maybe it means, again, if he is in fact guilty
of the crimes of which he's being accused,
did he in some way know that maybe there was something
off about him and perhaps he was engaged
in that field of study to understand or lean into it?
It may well be.
That's the conclusion that has been reached by experts we've spoken to
about human behavior who've looked at that have suggested that's the most likely explanation.
Speaking of explanations, someone could look at this and say, okay, maybe there wasn't
an explanation for this or maybe there was. Ted Bundy was a name that came up a lot in
this story. There were a lot of searches related to just for those who may be need a refresher remind us who Ted Bundy was.
Well, Ted Bundy was a prolific serial killer who was killing university students and college
girls. But as a character, he has fascinated numbers of Kolberger's professors.
Still, he was, it went beyond merely looking up Bunthe a lot
and being interested in him a good deal.
The messages that he uploaded about whether or not
he was normal, whether he ever could be normal
in this society, all suggested sort of that he was feeling
that he didn't belong,
but also that if he did belong to anybody,
maybe he belonged more to the cadre
that would be a Ted Bundy sort of character.
And again, somewhat amorphous, but that's how it looked.
You talked to people who had had what most of us would call just kind of
chance run ins with Brian Coburger.
I mean, at a pool party, I loved the PhD J that was my favorite title ever.
I would like to go to a party that he's DJing.
He seems like fun.
Sure.
Um, you know, I was very interested though, that they just kind of had these
little snapshots of him, just little, you know, interactions.
But even from then it sounded like some of them said, hey, even that just small interaction was
kind of off, was kind of strange.
Sure. Yes. And how much did they think about it at the time? I'm not entirely sure. After
the case became famous and Brian Colbert, who was arrested, all of that stuff came rushing
back to them. And they thought, yeah, he was a very odd dude. Nicole Soule So let's talk about some of the evidence that
you bring forward in this groundbreaking episode. I mean, of course, and we need to say that, yes,
this is evidence he's been accused of these crimes, a judge has entered a not guilty plea on his
behalf. But in this episode, you lay out some additional evidence that could point to his
alleged involvement in these murders. Most people know how his DNA was found on the knife sheath at the crime scene.
That's kind of a famous piece of evidence.
But talk about some of the other pieces of evidence that came out here.
Well, what we were most struck by was the video that we were able to obtain showing
the white car in the vicinity of the house at 1122 King Road in the minutes leading up to the murder.
We have the precise minutes and seconds
where the car appeared, kind of cruised by the house
until finally the car pulled into what appeared
to be the only place it could be would be 1122 King Road.
Although you can't actually see 1122 King Road
in the video, but there really couldn't be any other place it would be.
If I could jump in real quick, talk about that white sedan.
I mean, when you talk about it in the episode,
but what was with the back and forth and the back and forth?
That was very chilling to me.
Well, right.
It's a white car the police believe
is the white Elantra that belonged to Brian Kohlberger.
But the defense may well be able to point out
that you can't really tell exactly what kind of car it is. You see these headlights. belong to Brian Kohlberger. But the defense may well be able to point out
that you can't really tell exactly what kind of car it is.
You see these headlights.
You can tell it's a white car.
That's about it.
Our FBI profiler and the psychologist who looked at it
both said, oh, he's just kind of stealing himself.
He's getting ready.
He's saying, can I do this?
Can I do this?
And then he decided it was time.
Maybe I can't, maybe I can't, maybe I can, maybe I can't.
One of the things that I thought was an effective piece of storytelling and reporting in this,
Keith, was this animation that your team put together to kind of spell out how your investigative
sources believe this crime took place. And I have to say, for a lot of our audience who only kind of consumes these stories via
podcast and doesn't actually look at the episode, go back.
This is one that you need to go back, find on Peacock and actually look at this animation
because it tells us a lot.
It was a complicated situation.
The house isn't laid out like most houses would be.
The killer would have come in basically halfway up the house and then immediately made a beeline
up the stairs to the top floor where Maddie Mogan maybe slept.
One of the experts that you spoke with also talked about social media intel that one would
have gathered, right?
The victims, young ladies posted a lot on social media.
All of these strange things that one wouldn't necessarily think of could have been actual
clues to help the killer understand the layout of this house, which is very chilling.
When we get back, Kaylee was spontaneous.
Maddie was an old soul.
We're going to play some clips from interviews with family and friends of the four victims
to get to know them a little bit better. That's when we get back.
Texts between two of the surviving roommates show that they knew something was wrong. They
were upset. They were trying to figure out what was happening. Yet it seems that it took
a long time for 911 to be called.
Which has been a source of speculation and accusation ever since this occurred, and it
continues to be.
And they never did call 911 until hours and hours after this occurred.
And people wonder whether it is so and what they're hiding or whatever.
The one young woman who did, several points about this, the one young woman who did see
the killer and who talked about him having bushy eyebrows, which is a very important
point that the prosecution intends to use in this case against Brian Koberger who has
bushy eyebrows.
You can certainly see them in that selfie
he took soon after the killings.
The other one is why they didn't call
or do anything for so very long.
And the fact is that they had been partying
and partying virtually all night long.
So it's unclear exactly what was going on in the house,
but it's reasonable to assume that these two
very young people hear this commotion upstairs, see some evidence of a terrible thing having
occurred but are not prepared in their minds to believe it could have actually been a terrible
thing.
You know, you can't really, that doesn't happen, so you're not going to believe it.
You see somebody lying on the floor.
Well, I've seen people lying on the floor after parties before.
They're always, you know, they passed out.
It's just, it's a little more understanding, understandable
that they would have gone on for so long.
If there's one thing that I've learned in my so far brief time with Dateline,
it's that no matter in all of these stories,
we never know what we are going to do or what anyone will do when
confronted with a scene like this, coming upon someone that they know or that they love
that has been brutally killed. We don't know what you would do, what I would do, what any
of our audience would do. And you can speculate all you want, of course, but you certainly
don't know until you are faced with such an unimaginable moment. And so shock, who knows?
It's easy to kind of look and say, oh, call 911,
but you just don't know what one feels in that moment.
I'll tell you about one little minor incident that occurred
where I had a car broken into, smashed the windows.
And, but in the course of time,
between the time I made that call to the police
and the time they arrived, I did all the wrong things.
And yet I'd been for decades doing these kinds of stories
where I knew what the right things actually were to do,
but you lose yourself.
You just don't think rationally
for the first couple of minutes,
unless you really are, you know,
you say right away to yourself,
okay, I'm gonna be rationally and record this properly. So, you know, I'm looking through the bushes, I'm going to behave rationally and record this properly.
So I'm looking through the bushes,
I'm messing about with things,
I'm inside the car rummaging around,
doing all the wrong things.
So eventually the police said,
well, there's not much we can do about these things anyway,
but especially now.
Especially now. You've made it even more difficult.
We spoke earlier about these four students,
and I'm going to say their names because we want to dedicate some time to hear from their family,
their friends, those who knew them best about just who they were. So, Maddie Mogin,
Kaylee González, Zana Cronodal, Ethan Chapin, you got a chance to speak with their friends,
their family
about who they were.
Tell us a little bit about that.
Well, they were certainly smart young people and they were going places, all of them.
A couple of them were just about ready to graduate.
They had jobs lined up already.
The others had a little bit more time to go.
Their parents saw them as very responsible people.
They were living a college kid's life, but they were also getting high grades, all of them.
They were headed for good careers.
And all of them cared deeply about their families.
And so they were the kind of kids
you would be proud to have.
I think that's about them.
Best I can say about them because I didn't know them personally, but that
certainly is what others have said about them.
Well, let's listen to some of their family and friends.
Let's listen to some of the people who knew them best.
I loved Kaylee.
She was honestly such an amazing friend.
Kaylee, she was very competitive.
She was very spontaneous.
You could wake her up in the middle of the night
and say, hey, pack your bags,
we're going to Mexico in the morning.
And she would be like, are you serious?
Let's go.
So Maddie was the youngest out of the friend group
because those girls were very, very tight-knit.
But Maddie just, she was always,
she always seemed to be like the oldest of the group.
She just had a very old song
just super smart and intelligent and
Very wise for her age. I would say I
Miss her potential and her her sweetness and this grounded energy that
She just she really made people feel seen and like what they were doing mattered and made a difference.
Zana was beautiful. She was always smiling.
There's this video we found where she's just spinning in a 360 with this huge smile.
And you just want to know that person as someone who would put a smile on your face.
You know, when we do stories like this, I think that all of us can kind of identify
with this being on the cusp of stepping into life, right?
This kind of the excitement, the sense of excitement, being on the verge of realizing your potential.
No, it's very true. There is that point of being, of launching into life is so very exciting
and frightening at the same time. Can I do this? Can I do this? Well, yes, I'm going
to try. It's a wonderfully exciting time. And to be cut off like that in the midst of
it is just a horrific thing. Truly. For the many people who know the details of this case and who know these names of these
beautiful young lives, it is in connection to these murders. And I think that that has to also
present a specific and special kind of pain for their families, I would imagine.
Yes. That's the last thing they want is for their daughters and son to be associated with
this killing. And yet, it's like it's a tide. You can't stop the tide.
Up next, we're taking your questions from social media.
We had a lot of social media comments on this episode, as you could well imagine.
Let's hear from Gail Sorensen.
She said, wow, we really got a lot more of the story that we didn't know about before.
Keith, you're the best.
Oh, well, that's very kind of her.
Thank you.
We have an audio question.
Let's take a listen to this one.
Hi, Dateline.
It's Jabor Michael Estethan.
I'm calling from Allentown, Pennsylvania.
I was freaking out to say or ask if you had any chance
to contact Dr. Catherine Ramsland,
If you had any chance to contact Dr. Catherine Ramsland,
the professor at DeSales University here in Pennsylvania,
she has a wealth of knowledge on co-burger and she was his professor at DeSales.
Thank you and again, great episode
and all the best to Shane Bishopissip and all your producers.
Thank you.
Well, as a matter of fact, yes,
we certainly are aware of Catherine Ramson.
She is a very well-known researcher into serial killers.
One of the foremost experts on the BTK killer and others.
So Catherine Ramson was Brian K Coburger's professor. She recommended him
for his PhD, and she elected not to be part of our story. We are not sure yet. It's going
to be up to her what role she plays or doesn't play in his trial.
There is an interesting question that I want to ask you. I'm sure you'd love to answer
it.
Does Keith write his own questions?
Well, yes and no.
The is the answer to that question.
You know, I work with, as we all do, we work with some of the best producers in television
today.
So we collaborate.
But that said, once you're sitting in front of a camera, you ask the questions you're going to ask.
That's exactly it. We have to be nimble. And I should say that question is from Jennifer
Hart, but the interview goes where the interview goes.
Oh, it does.
I mean, there have been times when I bring all sorts of things out that were never written
down just based on the answers that you get. And you have to listen actively to always
get the best response.
Primary rule. Always, yes.
Intensively listen.
A lot of comments that we heard from our viewers about why it's taken so long for this to go to
trial. The murders of course happened in November of 2022. Trial is set for August of 2025. Phoenix
Lopez Harmon writes, what is taking so long? Is it because this is a death penalty case?
And it's important to point out that these trials are not instantaneous.
Yeah, for a death penalty case, I think this is relatively quick. But there are cases which
are far, far less serious than this one that can take even longer to get to court.
This has been a fascinating discussion, Keith, talking about this case, but also talking
about how you were able to bring us the story.
So thank you so much for talking with me today.
Thank you. Thank you. I like talking to you, Blaine.
I like it too. I'm enjoying this, Keith.
And that is it for Talking Dateline this week. Remember, if you've got any questions for us about stories or about Dateline,
you can always reach us 24- seven on social media at Dateline
NBC. And if you have a question for talking Dateline, you can record a message and send
it to us on social media or call this number and leave a voicemail. Here's that number
212-413-5252. And you'll have a chance to possibly hear your voice featured on an upcoming
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Thanks, as always, for listening.